“This signals the continued racialization and politicization of American justice,” Cashill told WND.

Cashill believes that the Abu-Jamal case, with which Adegbile was heavily involved, was a clear-cut example of justice being handled correctly, but the left distorted it for political gain in a similar way that they treated the Zimmerman case.

“The fact that they would make a cause out of a case that is so ‘open and shut’ is appalling,” Cashill stated. “It represents a reinforcement of the strategy the hard left has had for nearly a century. They’ve elevated the conspicuously guilty to the status of innocent and now they’re twisting it by adding the innocent to the status of guilty. That is why the Zimmerman case is so unprecedented.”

He is particularly worried that Adegbile, based on his history of actions and ideological bent, will be the one to go after Zimmerman with federal civil rights charges.

The Justice Department has refused to say it won’t file federal charges against Zimmerman, even though he was acquitted by a jury.

“In this appointment, Obama reaffirms his commitment to a strategy that started when the Comintern engaged themselves in the Sacco and Vanzetti Trial, and that is to racialize and polarize by using the criminal justice system in one way or another,” Cashill said.

Besides the Zimmerman case, Cashill cited two recent high profile cases the DOJ is pursuing that support the notion officials are taking a polarized and racial bias in what cases they decide to prosecute.

“Eric Holder is now demanding that schools stop racial profiling students when it comes to punishment,” Cashill noted. The absurdity is that administrators are already bending over backwards to not appear racist in their punishments. When it came to the Knockout Game, the federal government decided to prosecute only the white guy who knocked out the black guy as a hate crime and ignored a thousand cases that were contrary to that.”

Cashill said the government is “instituting, as a practice, the politically correct application of the law in America.”

“The George Zimmerman case is not a one-off case – it’s a sign of things to come,” he said.

In “If I Had A Son,” Cashill tells the inside story of how, as the result of a tragic encounter with troubled 17-year-old Trayvon Martin, the media turned Zimmerman into a white racist vigilante, “the most hated man in America.”

“If I Had A Son” tells how for the first time in the history of American jurisprudence, a state government, the U.S. Department of Justice, the White House, the major media, the entertainment industry and the vestiges of the civil rights movement conspired to put an innocent man in prison for the rest of his life.